Sanemori

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File:Sanemori.jpg from the series Nōgaku zue or Pictures of Noh Plays]]

Sanemori (Kyūjitai: {{nihongo2|實盛}}; Shinjitai: {{nihongo2|実盛}}) is a Noh play by Zeami Motokiyo about a troubled warrior spirit, unusual because of the great age of the warrior in question.

Theme

{{ill|Saitō Sanemori|ja|斎藤実盛}} was a samurai warrior who fought in the Genpei War, and died at the Battle of Shinohara when he was seventy-three years old.Bashō, The Narrow Road to the Deep North (Penguin 1983) p. 165 In Zeami's play, a travelling monk encounters a ghost who reveals himself to be Sanemori, having spent the two centuries since his death dwelling “among the Asuras/ Enduring pains too horrible to tell”.Anon ed., Noh Drama – Ten Plays (2012) Redeemed by prayers to Amida Buddha, the ghost then tells the story of his last fight, and how the dyed locks on his severed head moved his adversaries to respect and awe at his courage in fighting despite his advanced age:Anon ed., Noh Drama – Ten Plays (2012)

“Alas for the old warrior!

Utterly spent with fighting,

Like a dying tree storm-smitten...”Quoted in J-P Potet, Yeats and Noh (2012) p. 65

Later echoes

Bashō wittily quoted from the Noh play in an early haiku – “The old-lady cherry / Is blossoming, a remembrance / Of years ago – where the closing phrase is taken directly from the drama.Makoto Ueda, Matsuo Bashō (1982) p. 38

Later, at the very site where Sanemori’s helmet was kept, he wrote a more deeply felt haiku – “How pitiful! / Underneath the helmet / A cricket chirping” – taking his first line directly from the play.Makoto Ueda, Matsuo Bashō (1982) p. 141

See also

{{Commons category|Sanemori}}

References

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